Thomas' grand slam propels Blue Jays past Red Sox

Vernon Wells hit a two-run homer in the fourth and ace Roy
Halladay (1-1) tossed eight effective frames for the Blue Jays,
who have now beaten the defending World Series champions seven
straight times.

"We've got a good team this year," Thomas said. "We got off to
such a bad start last year - everybody - and dug ourselves a
hole. I know they swept us early last year, and it feels good
to be able to do the same thing (to them) this year."

Jacoby Ellsbury, Jason Varitek and J.D. Drew all smacked solo
shots for the road-weary Red Sox, who were outscored, 23-9,
during the series.

Josh Beckett (0-1), the majors' only 20-game winner last season,
made his 2008 debut and got into a bit of trouble in the fifth
with the score knotted at 2-2.

After getting the first two outs of the frame with little
problems, Beckett gave up a single to Aaron Hill before walking
Alex Rios and Wells to load the bases.

"I thought his legs started to go a little bit, which is
understandable," Red Sox manager Terry Francona said. "I wanted
to give him the opportunity to get through five, because I
thought he deserved it. That's kind of the fine line you walk,
you don't want to go too far with him."

"I felt good health-wise," said Beckett, who threw 92 pitches.
"Not the result that you want, but I felt good."

Beckett was then relieved by Manny Delcarmen, who surrendered a
grand slam to Thomas on the first pitch he threw. Thomas'
second home run in as many days gave the Blue Jays a 6-2 lead.
The 39-year-old designated hitter drove in eight runs during the
series.

"I hit it good. I'm just happy it jumped off my bat," Thomas
said. "It was a big hit in a situation that we needed it,
especially in a series with these guys - the defending World
Series champions. They were the best team of the league last
year, and we wanted to just come out today and show people that
we are for real."

"(Delcarmen) didn't locate his fastball where he wanted to,"
Francona added. "Frank's always been such an intelligent
hitter, besides being so strong. The ball just ran over the
middle of the plate."

It was all the offense that Halladay would need. The ace
yielded four runs and eight hits with a walk and six strikeouts.

"I think we all know that they're going to be a better team when
we're facing them in the middle of the year, having to travel
as much as they have and getting their guys rolling," Halladay
said. "But we'll take them any time."

Hill added an RBI double in the sixth inning, but Drew responded
with his second blast of the season to make it 7-3.

Kevin Youkilis tripled in the eight when shortstop John McDonald
collided with Wells in the outfield and then scored on David
Ortiz's base hit. But the Red Sox could not get any closer as
Jeremy Accardo slammed the door in the ninth to register his
third save of the season.

"I thought I had one of the only plays on the ball," McDonald
said of the collision. "I was listening as I was running and I
had to look back at the ball, and all I was trying to do was try
to catch it and make sure Vernon didn't call it. I think we
both called it at the exact same time."

"There's no more excuses here," Youkilis said. "Tired or not,
we've got to find a way to win. If we start making excuses,
it's going to become even more of a negative. We've got to stay
positive. We're 3-4, we've got a long, long way to go."

Beckett allowed five runs on three hits and four walks with six
strikeouts over 4 2/3 innings.

ALAT TORONTO - SCORING UPDATETWO-RUN HOME RUN BY VERNON WELLS (2) TO LEFT WITH 0 OUT IN THE 4TH OFF JOSH BECKETT SCORED ALEX RIOS.CURRENT SCORE: BOSTON 1, TORONTO 2DUE UP FOR TORONTO: F THOMAS (.222, 0-FOR-1)